RalphLambrecht
Subscriber
... For an 18% gray card, the log D would be 0.74, which is darker than the middle gray in a silver print on glossy paper.
I aim for 0.75 density for Zone V in a print. See attached:
... For an 18% gray card, the log D would be 0.74, which is darker than the middle gray in a silver print on glossy paper.
Diapositivo, it's a very good explanation, but it still makes 18% seem like an arbitrary choice. What am I missing? Ralph?
Let's see the numbers. What reflectance are we calling zone VIII for instance?
I'm always curious about how we can say that the light is "perceived as being only half as bright". Any idea how these tests are conducted? ...
I aim for 0.75 density for Zone V in a print. See attached:
Simplest reason it that 18% reflectance just is not the middle value of a glossy silver print.
More detailed explaination is that each type of paper has a different maximum black (remember all the threads on Dmax). The D-max, then determines what the D-middle (D-Middle = 1/2 D-Max) is going to be. It is not one universal value and is highly dependent on the paper.
The "Zone" followers are always posting transmission log D values of their negatiaves and assigning them zones, but they almost never divide up the paper reflection densities into the appropriate zones. I don't know why they leave this step out. But if they did they would find that the middle is about 36% for paper with a D-max of 2.0.
The 18% card would match the middle value of a paper with a D-max of 1.48.
Again, the 18% card is an exposure tool for times when you need an approximate incident reading and have only a reflected meter.
... Ralph, am I correct in assuming your equation comes from CIE? Could you break it down more and define the source of the variables?
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